Uber's new HQ is all about transparency, until you try to get in. Plus: the show liberating Broadway and "Hadestown" hits L.A. in our weekly arts newsletter.
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[Essential Arts] [Click to view images]A view of Uber's new San Francisco headquarters, designed by SHoP Architects. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times) I am finding myself mildly addicted to the TikTok hashtag [#ramenhacks]( because Iâm all for ways of dressing up instant ramen so that I donât feel like I still have the diet of a college student. (For the record, the combo with egg, Kewpie mayo and Shin Ramyun is good.) Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, arts and urban design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, with your weekly arts newsletter and sexy clay videos: California Uber alleys Fresh air is a hot commodity in architecture, one that has been made only more evident by the pandemic. That is why I was excited to pay a visit to Uberâs new San Francisco headquarters, designed by SHoP Architects. The building â actually, two buildings connected by a pair of bridges â have facades studded with 14-foot operable windows that do something fairly radical for an office tower: let fresh air in. [Look upward at a multistory building with glass windows, some of the windows are cracked open.]
Uberâs San Francisco headquarters, designed by SHoP Architects, has operable windows. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times) The accordion-style windows were placed in specific locations around the building, based on the patterns of the wind and the sun. And they are programmed to react automatically to external conditions: bending ever so slightly when itâs cooler or windier, or perhaps closing entirely or only admitting sips of air. Or opening more widely when the wind is still. As Fast Companyâs Nate Berg noted in [a story published last year]( upon the HQâs completion, the windows ârebel against the model of the air-conditioned box.â The building doesnât rebel completely â the fresh air only travels into the multistory common areas that inhabit the perimeter of the building, where employees at Uber can hang out, eat lunch, work on a task or gather for meetings. But it does make a significant move toward unplugging the U.S. office tower from its ravenous consumption of HVAC. Unfortunately, I was only able to see these architectural innovations from the outside because Uber wouldnât allow a journalist into its headquarters without a nondisclosure agreement. And at The Times, we have a no-NDA policy. (The whole trip left me wondering if having vital transportation infrastructure administered by a private company with controversial [employment practices]( and [murky algorithms]( for paying its contractors is such a great idea. It may be time to invest a few more dollars in programs like Metro Micro, L.A. Metroâs ride-hailing app, part of a pilot program that is bringing ride-sharing to eight zones around L.A. for $1 a ride. Knock LA has [a good report]( on the program.) Since I didnât have to sign an NDA to see the building from the street (which, if Iâm not mistaken, hasnât been privatized yet), I made my way to S.F.'s Mission Bay neighborhood, one of those revitalized urban zones still boasting that new-condo smell, to have a look at Uberâs windows â and perhaps get a peek inside them. Thankfully, the area around the building is studded with publicly accessible parking structures, so I had some vantage points from across alleyways and streets. [Seen from outside, the atrium of a glass building with a descending wooden staircase.]
My view of one of Uberâs common areas from the parking garage across a pedestrian lane. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times) I was there on a warm and breezy day in March, and it was possible to see windows slowly opening and closing over the course of my walk. As the sun began to set and the breezes picked up, you could really see the windows kick into action: As windows in one corner opened, the ones at the other end of the facade might close. Itâs a remarkable kinetic display, giving the building a dynamic skin. Though I look forward to office buildings where humans, along with an algorithm, might also be empowered to open a window. (Crazy, I know.) Even though I couldnât get inside Uber HQ, the trip wasnât a waste. As part of my afternoon spent skulking around the building, I also got a look at a separate tower, Mission Bay 3, which is also inhabited by Uber and was designed by Pfau Long, an architectural studio that is now part of Perkins&Will. There, I got to see a series of rattan egg chairs dangling from the ceiling of the wellness center: [A window in a glass office tower reveals rattan egg chairs hanging from the ceiling of a partially curtained room.]
A view into the Uber offices at Mission Bay 3 and Mission Bay 4 reveals a series of rattan egg chairs in a wellness space. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times) Huntsman Architectural Group did the interior design, including the wellness center ([see the images online]( â and the aesthetic definitely feels very microdosing-room-for-tech-bros. It was definitely worth the lurk. ADVERTISEMENT
On the stage After a couple of years of pandemic-induced quiet, Times theater critic Charles McNulty is hot on the trail of everything that is new in theater â on two coasts, no less! In New York City, he took in a performance of Michael R. Jacksonâs Pulitzer Prize-winning musical, âA Strange Loop,â which tells the story of an aspiring writer named Usher (played by Jaquel Spivey), who dreams of penning a hit musical about âa Black, gay man whoâs writing a musical about a Black, gay manâ but is faced with the reality of taking day jobs to make ends meet. âFor much of this triumphant, emotionally lacerating show, which had its official opening Tuesday at the Lyceum Theatre,â writes McNulty, âI sat with my mouth agape, astonished and grateful that [something so brutally honest]( and rigorously constructed had finally broken through to a Broadway stage. [Jaquel Spivey is shown standing on a stage before a series of red neon rectangles]
Jaquel Spivey as Usher â with an ensemble cast as his many inner voices â in âA Strange Loopâ at Broadwayâs Lyceum Theatre. (Marc. J. Franklin ) Also on Broadway is a revival of âFunny Girlâ â the musical that catapulted Barbra Streisand to fame â with Beanie Feldstein in the role of Fanny Brice. [The revival]( features a retool of the originalâs âsluggishâ book by Harvey Fierstein. A fan of Feldsteinâs, McNulty writes that she is âmost convincing as a Long Island matriarch who wants everything to run according to her plan.â But she has yet to make the role her own. Back in Los Angeles, McNulty checked out the Tony-nominated âHadestown,â which has landed at the Ahmanson Theatre [in âsmoldering fashion.â]( Inspired by the legend of Orpheus and Eurydice, he says the production âis crowded with vibrant musical performers.â For L.A., the show represents a comeback â since âHadestownâ was born and first performed here. The Timesâ Ashley Lee profiles Anaïs Mitchell, its creator, about [the musicalâs extraordinary journey]( âWe had 14 people and a dog in a 15-passenger van,â recalled Mitchell of the showâs early tour. âWeâve had a very long road. It was like a train that kept rolling â and here we are, back in L.A.â Mitchell also talks to Lee what about lies ahead. Interesting nugget: She has âstarted casting around a little netâ in her mind for the next musical project. [A man in a dapper pinstriped suit and standing on a balcony.]
Kevyn Morrow plays Hades in âHadestown,â now at the Ahmanson Theatre. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times) Lee also sat down for a Q&A with Lauren âLOLOâ Pritchard, who played Ilse in the rock musical âSpring Awakening: Those Youâve Knownâ and is now set to appear in the new country musical âMay We All.â âSpring Awakeningâ told the story of a group of adolescents while addressing topics like sexual development and mental health. The character of Ilse is a young woman who fled an artists colony where she was sexually abused. Pritchard talks to Lee about doing the show as she wrestled with [her own history of abuse](. Classical notes My former colleague Makeda Easter (whom I miss very much!) has a new arts newsletter titled âthe art rebellionâ that tells the stories of artist-activists. (Sign up [here]( Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber](. In [an article that touches on these themes]( for Represent Classical, Easter looks at some of the grassroots activist classical music groups looking to create change within the industry. âThrough benefit concerts, workshops and platforming emerging artists of color, these groups represent alternatives to the paradigm of classical music and are setting the example of what an inclusive classical industry could look like.â ADVERTISEMENT
See you at the Biennale OK, maybe not. Instead of going to the Venice Biennale and all of its attendant goings-on, I went to Denver. (More on that in the coming weeks.) But I can read all about the biennale on my space phone. L.A. painter Mary Weatherford [made a suite of works]( inspired by Titianâs 16th century masterpiece âThe Flaying of Marsyas,â which shows the tragic story of the satyr from Ovidâs tale. âI thought it was the most evil painting I had ever seen,â Weatherford tells the New York Timesâ Robin Pogrebin. The new works are currently on view at the Museo di Palazzo Grimani in Venice. L.A.-based critic Andrew Berardini delivers [a lyrical dispatch]( from Venice in Artforum, where art installations are interspersed with acknowledgments of the pandemic and the war in Ukraine. âArt and love and dancing and dreams,â he writes, âare worth fighting for, in whatever way we can.â Iâve been intrigued by images of Simone Leighâs installation at the U.S. Pavilion. The artist has given this very Jeffersonian building an African-style architectural makeover, by adding a thatched roof that drapes over the buildingâs roof: [The Neoclassical U.S. Pavilion in Venice is wrapped in thatch â resembling African architecture.]
For her installation at the 2022 Venice Biennale, sculptor Simone Leigh wrapped the U.S. Pavilion in thatch. (Timothy Schenck / Simone Leigh / Matthew Marks Gallery) As she told the New York Timesâ Siddhartha Mitter [of the installation]( The vibe she was looking for was â1930s African palace.â âIt has an over-the-top Blackness,â she says, âthat I really like.â Find more on the installation, which was commissioned by the ICA Boston, at [this website](. Graphic arts In the late 1960s, artist Larry Fuller launched âEbon: Fear of a Black Planet,â a comic with a Black superhero that paved the way for others that followed. Despite its influence, Fullerâs work remained relatively obscure â until artists Stacey Robinson and John Jennings, also known as Black Kirby (in reference to DC Comics pioneer Jack Kirby), [decided to expand Ebonâs story](. Their work, reports contributor Danielle Broadway, is now on view at the Culver Center for the Arts at UC Riverside. As Jennings tells Broadway: Itâs important to âlook back and find lost creations and creators.â [Enlarged comic book panels and characters against a bright wall.]
An installation view of John Jennings and Stacey Robinsonâs âEbon: Fear of a Black Planetâ at UC Riverside. (UCR Arts)
Design time I paid a visit to an old friend: The Timesâ Orange County building in Costa Mesa, where I once went to take a drug test. (I passed!) The building â really, a series of buildings that began with an office and printing plant designed by William Pereira â recently received a refresh courtesy of Ehrlich Yanai Rhee Chaney. Now known as âthe Press,â the structure will soon be occupied by Anduril, a defense contractor that designs drones. Itâs an opportunity to [dig a little bit into the history of The Times]( the history of SoCal and the history of the defense industry in Southern California â histories with an incredible amount of overlap. [A low-slung building, framed by fresh plantings, reveals a fragment of an old sign reading "S ANGELES."]
A view of The Timesâ Orange County plant, redesigned by Ehrlich Yanai Rhee Chaney. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times) Plus, architecture critic Mimi Zeiger reviews the Selldorf Architects-designed renovation at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. âRenovations always mean letting go of some part of the past, but [this one is particularly upwardly mobile]( she writes, âmore attuned to the language of the global art cognoscenti than a sleepy beach town.â Essential happenings Matt Cooper has the latest on what-to-do, with a roundup of all the cool [L.A. and O.C. museums shows to see in May](. This includes a look at the murals of Renaissance Rome at the Getty Center and a show of work by Japanese pop painter Takashi Murakami at the Broad museum â as well as much, much more! [A series of large stylized figures and an elephant.]
A detail from Takashi Murakamiâs âIn the Land of the Dead, Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow,â 2014. (Takashi Murakami / Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd / Robert McKeever, the Broad Art Foundation)
Moves Laguna Art Museum has named art historian Jean Stern and curator Rochelle Steiner [as curatorial fellows through early 2023](. The two will assist in developing and presenting museum exhibitions and public programs. Anna Deavere Smithâs âTwilight: Los Angeles, 1992,â a hybrid oral history/solo performance examining the roots of the Los Angeles uprising, [will return to]( the Mark Taper Forum nearly 30 years after its world premiere. The American Academy in Rome this week [announced the winners]( of the 2022-23 Rome Prize. Among the artists selected are Elle Pérez, Ioana M. Uricaru, Tony Cokes and Los Angeles artist Todd Gray. Passages Cynthia Albritton, also known as Cynthia Plaster Caster, who became known for creating casts of rock-star penises, [has died at 74](. Composer Klaus Schulze, a pioneer of electronic music, whose body of work included orchestral pieces, psychedelic jams and an electronic opera, is [dead at 74](. Painter Donald Baechler, known for canvases in which he depicted crude, âballoon-likeâ faces,â [has died at 65](. In other news â In Ukraine, burned-out Russian tanks have become [popular photographic backdrops](.
â In [this rather bananas essay]( Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) recommends tearing down historic buildings in Chicago for the sake of courthouse security. (Maybe the courthouse could get some nice blinds?)
â A series of 23 new artworks will be landing in San Diegoâs public parks starting on May 21. The installations [will be free and open to the public](.
â How a handful of major museums are working to weave greater diversity into [their collections and their exhibition programs](.
â An exhibition at the Vitra Design Museum in Germany examines how plastic became a [de facto material in industrial design]( â and how we might be able to move beyond it.
â Over at KCET, Carren Jao [previews a major installation]( by artists Einar and Jamex de la Torre at the soon-to-open Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture in Riverside. And last but not least ... Because making pottery [can be very sexy](. ADVERTISEMENT
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